BHeiney
Thu, 06/15/2023 - 14:04
Edited Text
Senate votes not to back Seeley
By TINA BROOKS
Feature Editor
Wednesday night's Student Cooperative Council (SCC) Senate meeting the last of the semester, was
plagued with long discussions and
arguments.
Among the most controversial
subjects was the question of whether
the SCC should back the retention of
Howard Seeley.
Lorin Mock, SCC President, stated,
"I feel very strongly we need a person
like Howard Seeley on campus."
Mock gave the following reasons
for why he feels Seeley should be
supported by the SCC and retained; it is
hard to get blacks into a basically white
area, Seeley gives a different point of
view; Seeley was rated very favorably m
Faculty Evaluations done by students; a
position is opening in the Sociology
department, which Seeley is qualified
for.
The resolution was eventually
defeated with many SCC members
expressing the feeling that it is not the
role of the SCC to back Seeley.
Mock recommended that Rosann
Brunetti and Donna Pasternak be
appointed as co-chairmen of the Summer Interim Committee. He also appointed Will Respress, an SCC newcomer, to
serve on the committee.
An affirmative vote was taken on
the matter after some members expressed concern over having two
chairmen, since this is the first time it
has ever been done.
David C. Heverly announced that
those involved with "Passing Through
Mat Town USA" would absorb the loss
from the production.
Mock said that the felt the SCC had
done all it could and they were willing to
back the production despite the controversy.
Since 'Passing Through..." would
not accept the money, the $6000 will
remain in the Social Committee's
budget. Mock reported that most of it
will probably not be used and will be
returned to the general fund.
A budget of approximately one
quarter of a million dollars was
approved for next year. It was noted.
cont. on page 4
Lock Hav«n Statt ColUgt
Eae
Phi Mu Delta
invites foreign
studentsto join
Fri. May 7, 1976
^ ^ o l . XVm No. 106
"I feel it is an excellent
dea. It will provide for a fuller
participation in campus life for
those students from other
countries who are interested in
doing so," remarked President Hamblin yesterday after
the Phi Mu Delta fraternity
presented him as chairman of
the Committee on the International Program of the American Association of State Colleges and University, with
their new International policy.
The new policy will allow
male foriegn exchange students to join Phi Mu Delta. By
allowing students from other
Nations to join their fraternity.
Phi Mu intends to make it a
learning situation for the
American student aftd their
prospective
International
brothers, as they learn about
each other's social and cultural
backgrounds.
Phi Mu brother, Ed Dennis feels the program is bound
to be a success and anticipates
a good turn-out for next fall.
Dennis reported that the
program is bound to be one of
the first of its kind. President
Hamblin hopes to give it some
national publicity in hopes that
other fraternities and sororities around the country and at
the colleges may be interested
in doing something similar.
Gracfuate grants make study abroad feasible
The Institute of International Education today announced the official opening of
the 1977-78 competition for
grants for graduate study or
research abroad in academic
fields and for professional
training in the creative and
performing arts. It is expected
that approximately 550 awards
to 50 countries will be available for the 1977-78 year.
The purpose of these
grants is to increase mutual
understanding between the
people of the United States
and other countries though the
exchange of persons, knowledge and skills. They are
provided under the terms of
the Mutual Educational and
Cultural Exchange Act of 1961
(Fulbright-Hays Act) and by
foreign governments, universities and private donors.
Applicants must be U.S.
citizens at the time of application, who will generally hold a
bachelor's degree or its equivalent before the beginning
date of the grant and, in most
cases, will be proficient io the
language of the host country.
Except for certain specific awards, candidates may not
hold the Ph. D. at the time of
application. Candidates for
1977-78 are ineligible for a
grant to a country if they
haven't been doing graduate
or conducting research in that
country during the academic
year 1976-77.
* * News briefs *
Creative and performing
artists are not required to have
a bachelor's degree, but they
must have four years of
professional study or equivalent exerience. Social work
applicants must have at least
two years of professional excon f. on page 4
**
New foofboll coach hired
Lock Haven State has
announced that Dr. William P.
Connor, Associate Professor of
Health and Physical Education
and Head Football Coach at
Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin, has accepted the position of Associate Professor of
Health and Physical Et ucation
and Head Football Coach at
LHSC.
A complete release on
Connor will be available early
next week.
Dr. Russel Milliken, Administrative Vice-President
announced Wednesday of this
week that the board charge for
student who room in dorms
and eat their meals in Bentley
Hall will not increase next fall.
' 'There will be a change of
food services," Milliken confirmed, "and they will be charging slightly more per student
per week than the service we
presently employ, but the
administration has decided to
try to absorb the difference.
Milliken mentioned that
SCUD (State College and
University Directors) Board
have raised the ceiling on the
board charge $72.00. The
LHSC administration, however, has opted not to raise the
board charge from its present
rate of $468.00 pet semester.
Fri.. May 7. 1976
EAGLE EYF
I'il.til'
Fred Schultz's
Letter to the editor
Faces
in the
Crowd
Platitudes won't stop racism
l l ' llu' f ititor,
\ Ki'spoii-sr 111 Dr li'u HI.
Hii«
I.MIL;
!ii)\\
ioiiij'
M u s i \ U ' M II!,111! i M i y y i ' l l i h m i!
11 ihc niiir.is-. ol inllipop IIIHT-
iisni .mil proksiiuiial puiulis .(lurun (.• tin' Ai4iR'\i isms .lUklll'l ix'sisll, ,is .•wpri'sscci
n i)r, li-w Ill's k'lliT - E.4.GLE
l-:VE, M.i\ 3. I'Cd, , , uhiL-h
. oiucvcij all !lic !iearlt'i.-l(
Mnccrii\ ill l^cd McKuen and
Kahlil tiihraii
il musl bi |)iosiinied fnini
he same lelUr ihal In eonibal
he e\ ils ol raeism ail \ou need
ID is pniehiini \uii ,ire a racist I
oila - ihe inslani free and e|iial soeietv is |)rodiiee(l ti'oni
he hal ol sell-knowledge,
lou proud Socrales woidd
lave been. Or lo lake il down
nothcr philosojihical notch lie arcane rite ot exorcism asy enough, but how? Is a
nusque. "Get thee behind
•lie. Satan.", siitficient or docs
racism require the full regalia
>l bell, book and candle?
If troubled people who are
deeply concerned about the
\ il dualism of our society arc
orccd to conclude that racism
s generic, innate and inherled - where can they turn?
Vlust they lick their bleeding
learts in seclusion - knowing
10 matter what they think hey really (as Dr. Irwin
suggests), at gut lc\el - hate
.ill black people? And that
;he only solution is some sort
of magical encounter session
CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE
Women's
MEDICAL
C£IN1TER
Manitrual Ragulation
Birth Control
Counsallng
L
(215) 265-1880
l'\ \\ Inch IVnai ( OIOM\ t'..S.,A.
IS li^anslormed lo Ihe \uinderi.nul of "Paid el V'irginie. '
^ \m can moulh platitudes
iiil the Se'^nion on the Mount
comes OUI of your e.irs, (last
mixed metaphor* but it won't
gel an\one a job, it won't get
anviine decent housing and it
won't break ilown years ot entrenched perverse bigotry.
What is not needed nov\
are more naive, simplistic
Ladies' Aid Society sentiments, but action, action and
more action.
.Sitting on your ass and
spouting ivory-tower idylls
does not a free society make.
Liz Bennett
Off-campus student
Activity fee
doesn't include
many benefits
To the editor:
My gripe has been long in
coming. I've been pushed and
prodded too far by the S.C.C.
and Mr. Nagy. 1 live a quiet
student life. I've placidly paid
my activity fee each semester
like a good little student, and
never said a word when the
regularly increased. Now,
now I'm upset! The other day
the S.C.C. secretary wouldn't
."^erox copies for me because
she didn't feci like it. After 1
stormed around in the office,
she said 1 could do it myself
cat the small cost of .10 per
copy), Isn't the Xerox machine funded by the S.C.C.
budget? Doesn't that secretary get paid by the S.C.C.
ludget?
Another incident happened just today. I wanted to cash
a $5.00 check which another
student had written out to me.
Due to the fact,it was written
'rom one student to another I
had to get Mr. Nagy to O.K.
the check. No notice being
paid to the fact that I had my
I.D. validated. So, I took the
check to Mr. Nagy and after
proving to him I was a student,
and proving to him I had a
validated I.D., he didn't veto
my check. I cashed my check.
Our last Face in the Crowd for the semester, is t'ne dorm on
ihis campus with the most personality. High Hall.
A wise High Hall resident once said, ihat they put all the
normal people in the other dorms and they put all the derelicts in
High Hall. An investigation of the Campus Law Enforcement
records and the Dean of Student Life's office could prove this
statement to be correct.
High Hall has seen the likes of such standouts as Chet
Glowacki. Bob Bcirrickman, Wayne "Mad Dog" Field, Steve
"Stud" Studholm, and last, but certainly not least, Terry
McGlinchey. who is known by all as Teen Angel.
.High Hall residents of tomorrow will never be the same as the
High Hall residents of yesterday and today. High Hall will be
losing most of the people who made it famous, next semester.
Everyone is either dropping out, transferring, or moving out of the
dorm.
Probably High Hall will never again see the likes ofthe Brown
Towel, the afternoon bathers on Pebble Beach, the mobile lounge,
otherwise known as the elevator, and the hockey, soccer, golf,
football, baseball, and host of other sports that were played in the
hallway.
A freshman next year will never find out about; the Killer,,
the Towering INferno, Jersey, wall ball. Bill Sheet and the upset
pool table, and most of all The Parties! Only good old Mrs. Foltz
will cherish these memories.
Whether they say it happily or sadly,Joe, Jack, Larry,
Froggy, Jersey, Herb, Gut. Bo. Wit, Chuck, Wes, Errol, Jit and all
the rest would like to say good-bye to High Hall.
but had to pay the small
amount of. 10. Mr. Nagy is an
employee of the S.C.C. and
the bookstore is under the
S.C.C. The S.C.C.is a student
corporation and being an
activity fee paying student, 1
own a share of that corporation; therefore, the preceding
incidents were uncalled for
cont. on page 4
Editor's note — In reference to
the article "Cross-country trip
planned for summer" two
additional points of information must be clarified: food
and laundry c-osts are incladed
in the 700 dollar fee to be
chaiged for the trip, and the
cost of the trip Is based on
eight students going bi two
S.C.C. vans.
"To the Editor" and the
writer's signature, DIanna
WIttle, were accldently ominitted from the letter to the editor
In the Wednesday May 5
edition of the Eagle Eye.
Tfiank you to
placement office
tutoring center
To the Editor:
As a senior who will soon
be moving on- I wish to
express some thoughts publicly before the close of classes
this semester. If you are a
student who is disillusioned
with Lock Haven, perhaps this
letter will change your mind a
bit. A THANK YOU to those
very kind people at the Placement Office who are always
willing to help - and to those at
the Tutoring Center who gave
me a wonderful experience as
well as being a pleasure to
work for. . . but inexpressible
Thank You's must go to those
professors who in my opinion
shine above the others because their talent and enthusiasm for their respective
areas is evident in every class:
Mrs. Bea Brown, Dr. Carney,
cont. on page 4
PRAECO PITCH
Avoid froumoffc regrefs:
Buy your Praeco now!
A DYING PUBLICATION? -- The Praeco, pictured above
with some of its cohorts, may be under threat of
extinction due to fiscal illness. Dollars are the cure to its
ailment; it makes good 'cents' to buy a yearbook. Get
yours today or tomorrow at lunchtime in the cafeteria.
Traditional yearbook
is sfucfenfs' favorife
"The day ofthe magazine
yearbook is gone," announced
Columbia Scholastic Press Advisors Association (CSPAA)
President Charles E. Savedge.
"It's popularity lasted only a
few years in the eariy 70's.
Students want a compact
package of the school year to
take with them when they go."
Savedge's comments
were made at a recent yearbook advisors' workshop in
New York City. He added that
the traditional style yearbook,
after which LHS' Pneco is
fashioned, has been and will
be the standard best-seller in
yearbooks for college students
around the country.
"College people want
their college careers told in
pictures. They'll keep student
newspapers if they want a
printed record of events,"
contended Savedge.
True to Savedge's comments, the 1977 Pnwco will
match its format with the
traditional one encouraged by
the CSPAA president. A magazine edition was planned for
the 1977 school year, but was
scrapped in a change of
editors.
Just think. Thirty years
from now, when you're married or dead or divorced, your
time spent here at Lock Haven
State will stretch out as the
most memorable portion of
your existence. 2006 will be
the year; Stanley Kubrick will
be the Patron of the Galaxy.
You'll be'nearing retirement
ftom a mundane life of riding
starships and popping proteinmeal pills. You'll have fights
with your computer foreman,
and there'll probably be a
huge layoff at the IHRP (the
Interstellar Humanoid Reproduction Plant) where you mix a
potent (heh-heh) combination
of testosterone extract and oil
of ova in a centrifuge from 9 to
5.
So there you'll be - a
destitute technological tenderloin. One day you'll lay back in
your imported Alpha Majorian
air-chair and kick yourself
(with your silicone ground
pads) for not buying a 1976
Praeco.
You'll think of all the good
times you had at LHS that you
never thought you'd ever
remember as being good.
You'll remember that crummy
roommate who took a bath
every other full moon, and the
time you saw a rat in the
ceiling tile at Fred's. Then
you'll think ofthe weird music
you listened to back then, but
you'll really miss those great
pre-pill meals that were actually cooked and consisted of
food and edible filler.
You'll remember the controversy over drugs, and how
it was much more fun then
because it was illegal. You'll
remember the classic cold and
the perrenial hangover and
you'll cry because you really
miss those days when you felt
so good because you didn't
have a cold or you weren't
hungover.
Buy a 1976 Praeco now,
and you won't suffer those
traumatic memories. You'll be
one of those lucky ones who
has a book made out of that
extinct resource paper. You'll
pay $6.00 now and have a
collector's item worth probably 40,000 quatlooves. You'll
have class. Just think.
Yearbooks will be on sale
daring the lunch hoar in
Bentley Hail today. Cktst of
the pablication is $6.00. Bay a
YearlMwk and a Book of Meal
Tickets and get yoar lanch
bee!
r
Today's Editorial
HELP!
It's embarrassing to ask for help. We ail like to think
we can get by on our own, and when we see we need
others, sometimes it's a blow to our pride.
Actually, the people who work on Publications are
only asking for students to help themselves. And that is
strangely ironic. The fact that Publications workers are in
danger of losing their jobs is secondary to the fact that the
college may lose an industrious department that tries to
serve a student need. Some people don't think a
Publications department is important enough to support,
and if there's enough of them, their opinions will be
realized.
This school can't affort to pour money into an effort
that doesn't come anywhere near to paying for its
expenses. Something has to give.
Right now we're trying to get the students to give.
Give $6.00. Six dollars can get you a decent meal or a
cheap shirt. It can also get you a 14 dollar and 81 cent book
that holds certainly more than $15.00 worth of
remembrances.
The SCC picks up the tab for senior yearbooks so
seniors receive theirs free. The SCC also pays $8.81 for
every other student who desires one. They do that because
they want to give the students a chance to buy something
they'll always have. That means the students can buy a
brand new yearbook for an outrageously low price of
$6.00. So far, 200 out of approximately 2100 undergraduates have bought yearbooks.
Student Publications was budgeted this past year to
buy 1200 yearbooks. As of this date, 700 of them sit in the
Publications Office.
We've tried to hustle them. That didn't work. Now
we're trying to get the students to buy them strictly out of
sympathy. And concern. If they had any idea of the time
and thought it takes to deliver such a product, they
couldn't help but appreciate the 1976Praeco.
What it boils down to is we're admitting a mistake.
We honestly thought that many more students would want
a good yearbook. Whether or not we receive some help in
paying for the ones we have now, there's a very good
chance we won't be having a yearbook next year. And If
we do, seniors will probably have to pay for theirs.
Right now it's a question of economics. Buying a
yearbook now, for any reason, will help the to sustain the
efforts of the Publications people. Journalism is supposed
to become a major here in a couple of years, and won't it
be just great if there's no Eagle Eye?
We've published this special issue of the paper in
order to saturate our readers with yearbook-mania.
Hopefully, students will realize the value in buying a
yearbook this year. It goes far beyond the last page.
Letter to the Editor
To the Editor:
Wow, man, sorry if this
isn't spelled right, but I'm just
really blown away. I'm just
writing to ask you if you'll start
printing the Eagle Eye on the
same kind of paper as the
Praeco.
See, I copped a lid the
other day but didn't have any
material for to consume my
herbs in. Seeing an Eagle Eye
lying under my philosophy
book, I was struck with an
ingenious idea: roll my stash
in yesterday's trash.
Well I took one half-toke
and, believe me, you'd rather
snort camphor crystals than
fool with home-grown hootch
in an Eagle Eye.
Being a determined head,
and not having been "skatin'
since 3:00 yesterday, I
searched for a lip-slip that
wouldn't contribute to the
disintegration of my lung
tissue.
Well, my roommate had
just bought a 1976 Praeco, and
you'd be amazed at how good
page 92 tasted. I did the lid
and then thumbed through the
yearbook and man those pictures were absolutely heavy,
man. I mean they just give you
a rust).
If you could please start
printing the Eagle Eye's on
Praeco paper I'd sure be
grateful. I'll turn my dealer
friends on to it and I'd bet a
gold bong screen they'll buy
you out! That's not a proposition, that's just an inebriated
guess.
Sincerely,
Buzz Dout
'Do I hear $6.50?"
S-E-X in the P-U-B
This is Evalyn. She's our general manager. Evalyn gets advertising for the newspaper,
fixes broken publications equipment, helps to keep our budget intact, answers the phone and
is generally a friend to everyone involved in Student Publications.
One other thing Evalyn does is try to sell yearbooks. So far she's not faring too well.
When she found that hardly anyone was coming in to buy yearbooks, Evalyn said, " I would
just love anybody who came in and bought a yearbook!" We thought about it, but then
decided she'd better not. There's probably something in the Student Publications
Constitution that prohibits that kind of behavior anyway.
We're pretty liberal here at Publications, and we figure people ought to be allowed to do
what they're moved to. So we came up with a deal for Evalyn and anyone who comes into the
Publications Office today with six bucks and the above picture. That person will get to kiss
Evalyn.
Before people start trying to lock us up for breaking the law, we have to make one thing
clear. If some "unacceptable" buyers come in with purely lecherous intentions, Evalyn
reserves the right to give us six bucks out of her pocket and tell the dude to kiss-off. After all
Evalyn ain't the one who's hard up — we are.
Evelyn's no dummy though. She knows that we pay her, and we get our revenue from
yearbook sales among other things. So she's not going to bite the hand that feeds her, she's
going to kiss the person that pays her six bucks for a yearbook.
We realize that this Is experimental salesmanship. But who knows? This could be the
biggest thing in Lock Haven since coed dormitories. We'll just have to wait and see. We
have gone the way of all flesh and yearbook salesmanship. Bring in this picture of Evalyn
and six bucks, and get to kiss our general manager and a yearbook to boot.
Photographs copyright © 1976 Praeco
Ttiere can be no doubt that ttiis past school year has been an extraordinary one.
It boiled over with bizarre news events, bomb scares, budget cuts, cultural activities both successful and controversial - and great sports. Get a pictorial record of this
memorable year with the purchase of a 1976 Praeco. On sale today and tomorrow
during the lunch hour in Bentley, and all day every day in the Publications Office,
ground floor PUB.
PRAECO
PRAECO
PRAECO
PRAECO
PRAECO
May 7
page 3
EAGLE EYE
LH. baseball squad
wins division crown
By STEVE HEVERLY
Staff Reporter
WHAT IS A GOLDEN WHISTLE? - A Golden Whistle is
an honor bestowed on Physical Education Seniors, by
Physical Education seniors, for outstanding achievement
in the field. This year's winners were Michelle Corkery
and Bob Wright.
Eaglettes score
The Lock Haven State
Ba.seball leam became the
college's first division cliamnion in four years by det'eatuiL;
Slippery Koek Stale ,1-0 in a
nine
inniny
play-ott
i.;anie Tuesday atternoon al
indiana Field.
Pitcher Bob Weber performed brilliantly and pitehed
nine innings under play-off
pressure allowing just four hits
and no runs.
The Bald Eagles will open
lip the Conference play-offs
against the Eastern division
champions. Mansfield State
College, this Friday at 1:.K) at
Woolrich Memorial Field.
Game two of three will be held
at noon on Saturday at Wool-
easy victory
over Bloomsburg
By AL VALLETTA
Men's Sports Editor
*^L
-^A-T ^
Ht/f "*
"i
The Lock Haven State
Women's Tennis team scored
a 7-2 victory over Bloomsburg
State College on Tuesday.
Deb Stopper defeated
Ann McMunn 6-0. 6-1, Cindy
Stopper defeated Deb Woring
6-2,6-1, Jan Yerkes downed
Sue Weber 6-4, 5-7, 7-5, Sheila
Blackburm was edged by Deb
Sabatali 7-6, 6-4. Kyle Cornelius got by Sue Purnell 6-7, 7-5,
6-4, and Cathy Rose was
defeated by Lori Stonebech
6-4, 6-4 in singles action.
All three doubles teams
scored wins as the Stoppers
downed McMunn and Woring
6-1, 6-2, Cheryl Prosser and
Paula Wolfe defeated Mary
McHaugh and Sabatali while
Cheryl Channing and Donna
Tyler defeated Purnell and
Stonebeck, 6-3, 4-6, 6-0.
The women's final match
is today as they travel to the
Penn State Altoona campus for
a
1:00
p.m.
match.
BOB WEBER
Nittany Lions romp
By AL VALLETTA
Men's Sports Editor
The Lock Haven State
Women's Lacrosse team lost
its final match of the season
Tuesday to Penn State University, 11-3.
The Eaglettes, who finished 3-4-1 on the season,
were led bv freshmen Sue
Woolston's goal and two
goals by Caroly Rheiner.
Senior goalie Cathy Sherman had 17 saves in her last
varsity performance.
rich. If necessary game three
uill begin one-half hour alter
g.inie l\M).
Coach
Charles
FIHM-IC
staled in an ecstatic iockcri-ooiii that Bob Weber hinietl.
'the game of his lit''
••Weber .-.iruck "^" Ihrec
and was extremely lough with
men on base.
Weber goi
stronger toward the end as thr
taste of viclorv crept closer."
said Hberle.
The game was a pitcher's duel
as Slipperv Rock pitted its ace
against Weber. The Rock s
()•"'•• firehaller Kerr\ '•Mr.
K.^' Keenan hurled a Inie
game allowing just one earned
run.
Ihe game was scoreless
until the si.xth when " I h e
Haven" scored two unearned
runs.
Mike Crone started the
Haven machine rolling as he
reached first base on an error
by the Slippery Rock shortstop. Ed Strum then singled
with two outs. Dave Rover
reached base on an error and a
run scored and Stum moved to
third.
While Weber continued to
put Slippery Rock "goose
eggs" up on the scoreboard.
Lock Haven got an insurance
run in the eighth on a walk to
Stum. Royer then singled,
followed by a RBI single by
Steve DeLisle.
Outstanding fielding was
turned in by speedster Joe
Tarconish and Dave Royer.
The victory was a big one
for the team but especially for
The junior varsity lost its senior regulars Mike Crone.
final match of the season as Mike Mersky, Dave Royer,
Penn State edged the Eag- and ,leff Kashner. As freshmen the\ sat through a 3-i 1
lettes, 7-6. on two late goals.
conference record and prePaula Ernst, Kim Pallasdicted that Lock Haven would
tone. Pat Rudy, Amy Ousler,
win a division crown before
Wendy Keller and Mary Flieg
they graduated.
each scored a goal for the
'Thebaseball team warHaven.
med up Wednesday for the
The Lock Haven State play-offs by traveling to East
Golf team finished in twelfth Stroudsburg for a double
place at the Pennsylvania header. The Bald Eagles split
State Conferecne Champion- the doubleheader winning the
ships at Shippensburg.
first game 5-0, then losing the
Led by freshman Jeff Ru- second 5-4.
pert's two day total of 162
In the first game, Sopho(80,82) the Eagles totaled an
cont. on page 4
855 stroke count.
senate
com. Irom page 1
however, that an adjustment
would have to be made on the
money
allocated
for
the
summer.
The SCC also discussed
sign guidelines proposed by
ihe administration. Included in
the guidelines are; signs and
posters can only be hung on
bulletin boards, large signs
iiist be approved, signs must
lit contain any derogatory
latcments. signs must contain dates.
It was announced that
\.R.A. will return as Lock
laven State's food service
ecause they underbid Macke.
"We'll have to hold them
letty much to the contract,"
onimentcd Mock.
Free Tickets are available
in the secretary's office in the
PUB for a baseball game to be
played between the Williamsport Tomahawks and the Pittsfield Brewers on May 15 at
Bauman's Field in Williamsport. The SCC purchased 300
tickets from the Lock Haven
Chamber of Commerce.
On July 16. 17 and 18 a
tate-wide Commonwealth
\ssoeiation of Students mcetiig will be held at LHS.
Other announcements inhided that freshman orientalion will be this Saturday and
\ earbooks will be on sale today
in Bentley from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m.
activity
conl. trom page 2
and absurd. My protest will
take Ihc form of this letter and
a pledge to not pay my future
activity fees until situations
and people are put in their
place.
Diana Powell
thank you
cont. Irom page 2
Mr. Fetter, Dr. Gary, Mr.
Lundy, Mr. Mullen, Dr. Podol,
and Mr. Van Horn.
This is a feeble attempt to
express what 1 f e e l . . . you will
never be forgotten - with much
grafitude - many sincere
thanks.
Mrs. Barbara Kitko
Fri., May 7, 1976
EAGLE EYE
page 4
ih.
cont. Irom page 3
more Wayne Sowers pitched a
super game allowing just two
hits and no runs.
The Eagles scored two in
the third and one run in each
of the fourth, fifth, and
seventh innings.
Fatigue resulting from
three road games caught up
with the team in the second as
East Stroudsburg got single
runs in the first five innings to
offset Lock Haven's power
explosion in the third.
In the third inning, Mike
Crone ripped a home run. Joe
Tarconish then singled and
scored on Ed Stum's triple.
Following Stum's triple, Steve
DeLisle ripped a tremendous
two-run homer.
CLASSIFIEDS
WANTED - - Part-time employees for Student Publications, Fall 1976. Typists, photographers, printers needed.
No experience necessary; we
will train.
Steady hours,
$1.87/hour wage.
Contact
Evalyn Fisher, Publications
Office, ground floor PUB, ext.
456.
Help Wanted - Early childhood
or elementary majors for day
care substitutes. 962-2379.
Denise DeGeorge, Pioneer
Day Care Center
TALENT SHOW - Tonight at
Price Auditorium, 8 P.M. Featuring LHSC Talent.
No
admission fee.
FOR SALE-1973 CL-350
Honda, 5,000 miles, extras.
Contact Steve Guthrie, ext 443
or 748-9950.
1
Everyone wtio worl(ecJ on "Tiy
Can't Take It With You", "Bus
Stop", "Ttie Brave Little Taylor",
"The Creation of ttie World and
ottier Business", "Ttie Nigtit
Thoreau Spent In Jail", "Cinderella of Loreland", "The Annerican
Dream", and/or "The Hunted" in
any capacity is invited to a College
Players Banquet and Party Saturday, May 8th. Stop by Sloan 106
or 107 for more information...then
spread the word.
i
graduate
cont. Irom page 1
pericnce after the Master of
Social Work degree; candidates in medicine must have
an M.D. at the time of application.
Selection is based on the
academic and/or professional
record of the applicant, the
validity and feasibility of the
proposed study plan, tbe applicants' language preparation
and personal qualifications.
Preference is given to candidates who have not had prior
opportunity for extended study
or residence abroad.
Information and application forms may be obtained
from C. Herbert Larson, Jr.,
Fulbright Program Adviser at
Career Development Center.
The adviser is located in Raub
Hall and has office hours Mon.
thru Fri. from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The deadline date for receipt
of applications in the Adviser's
office is October
ROOMS FOR RENT-For summer. Contact Bob Tayne, ext.
437,
WANTED; someone to share a
house and expenses for summer mths only - call 748-2697.
Rooms for Rent in Summer.
Contact A. Chester Lomison —
748-9383.
FOR SALE; 1963 Plymuth
Valient in good running condition -$150. Call 748-2697.
FREE! — Tickets to the May
15th Minor League (AA) baseball, night game between the
Williamsport Tomahawks and
the Pittsfield Brewers may be
obtained in the PUB secretary's office. Supply is limited;
first come, first served. Service provided by the SCC.
cnddleA
HALLMARK CARD & G i n SHOP
EXCELLENT
SELECTION OF CARDS
AND MOTHER'S DAY
GIFTS
1
t
*
1-
urs: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9 to 9
Wed. till noon
Tues., Sat. 9 to 5
1
^
USED BOOK BUY
Students, professors: Put your excess books into circulation! Sell them on May 17 and 18 in
the PUB upper lounge
STORE INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE
Leisure reading books: hardcover and paperbacks - 10% off list price
STORE SALE
GYM BAGS: TWO SIZES
Medium, $4.50
Large, $5.50
By TINA BROOKS
Feature Editor
Wednesday night's Student Cooperative Council (SCC) Senate meeting the last of the semester, was
plagued with long discussions and
arguments.
Among the most controversial
subjects was the question of whether
the SCC should back the retention of
Howard Seeley.
Lorin Mock, SCC President, stated,
"I feel very strongly we need a person
like Howard Seeley on campus."
Mock gave the following reasons
for why he feels Seeley should be
supported by the SCC and retained; it is
hard to get blacks into a basically white
area, Seeley gives a different point of
view; Seeley was rated very favorably m
Faculty Evaluations done by students; a
position is opening in the Sociology
department, which Seeley is qualified
for.
The resolution was eventually
defeated with many SCC members
expressing the feeling that it is not the
role of the SCC to back Seeley.
Mock recommended that Rosann
Brunetti and Donna Pasternak be
appointed as co-chairmen of the Summer Interim Committee. He also appointed Will Respress, an SCC newcomer, to
serve on the committee.
An affirmative vote was taken on
the matter after some members expressed concern over having two
chairmen, since this is the first time it
has ever been done.
David C. Heverly announced that
those involved with "Passing Through
Mat Town USA" would absorb the loss
from the production.
Mock said that the felt the SCC had
done all it could and they were willing to
back the production despite the controversy.
Since 'Passing Through..." would
not accept the money, the $6000 will
remain in the Social Committee's
budget. Mock reported that most of it
will probably not be used and will be
returned to the general fund.
A budget of approximately one
quarter of a million dollars was
approved for next year. It was noted.
cont. on page 4
Lock Hav«n Statt ColUgt
Eae
Phi Mu Delta
invites foreign
studentsto join
Fri. May 7, 1976
^ ^ o l . XVm No. 106
"I feel it is an excellent
dea. It will provide for a fuller
participation in campus life for
those students from other
countries who are interested in
doing so," remarked President Hamblin yesterday after
the Phi Mu Delta fraternity
presented him as chairman of
the Committee on the International Program of the American Association of State Colleges and University, with
their new International policy.
The new policy will allow
male foriegn exchange students to join Phi Mu Delta. By
allowing students from other
Nations to join their fraternity.
Phi Mu intends to make it a
learning situation for the
American student aftd their
prospective
International
brothers, as they learn about
each other's social and cultural
backgrounds.
Phi Mu brother, Ed Dennis feels the program is bound
to be a success and anticipates
a good turn-out for next fall.
Dennis reported that the
program is bound to be one of
the first of its kind. President
Hamblin hopes to give it some
national publicity in hopes that
other fraternities and sororities around the country and at
the colleges may be interested
in doing something similar.
Gracfuate grants make study abroad feasible
The Institute of International Education today announced the official opening of
the 1977-78 competition for
grants for graduate study or
research abroad in academic
fields and for professional
training in the creative and
performing arts. It is expected
that approximately 550 awards
to 50 countries will be available for the 1977-78 year.
The purpose of these
grants is to increase mutual
understanding between the
people of the United States
and other countries though the
exchange of persons, knowledge and skills. They are
provided under the terms of
the Mutual Educational and
Cultural Exchange Act of 1961
(Fulbright-Hays Act) and by
foreign governments, universities and private donors.
Applicants must be U.S.
citizens at the time of application, who will generally hold a
bachelor's degree or its equivalent before the beginning
date of the grant and, in most
cases, will be proficient io the
language of the host country.
Except for certain specific awards, candidates may not
hold the Ph. D. at the time of
application. Candidates for
1977-78 are ineligible for a
grant to a country if they
haven't been doing graduate
or conducting research in that
country during the academic
year 1976-77.
* * News briefs *
Creative and performing
artists are not required to have
a bachelor's degree, but they
must have four years of
professional study or equivalent exerience. Social work
applicants must have at least
two years of professional excon f. on page 4
**
New foofboll coach hired
Lock Haven State has
announced that Dr. William P.
Connor, Associate Professor of
Health and Physical Education
and Head Football Coach at
Ripon College in Ripon, Wisconsin, has accepted the position of Associate Professor of
Health and Physical Et ucation
and Head Football Coach at
LHSC.
A complete release on
Connor will be available early
next week.
Dr. Russel Milliken, Administrative Vice-President
announced Wednesday of this
week that the board charge for
student who room in dorms
and eat their meals in Bentley
Hall will not increase next fall.
' 'There will be a change of
food services," Milliken confirmed, "and they will be charging slightly more per student
per week than the service we
presently employ, but the
administration has decided to
try to absorb the difference.
Milliken mentioned that
SCUD (State College and
University Directors) Board
have raised the ceiling on the
board charge $72.00. The
LHSC administration, however, has opted not to raise the
board charge from its present
rate of $468.00 pet semester.
Fri.. May 7. 1976
EAGLE EYF
I'il.til'
Fred Schultz's
Letter to the editor
Faces
in the
Crowd
Platitudes won't stop racism
l l ' llu' f ititor,
\ Ki'spoii-sr 111 Dr li'u HI.
Hii«
I.MIL;
!ii)\\
ioiiij'
M u s i \ U ' M II!,111! i M i y y i ' l l i h m i!
11 ihc niiir.is-. ol inllipop IIIHT-
iisni .mil proksiiuiial puiulis .(lurun (.• tin' Ai4iR'\i isms .lUklll'l ix'sisll, ,is .•wpri'sscci
n i)r, li-w Ill's k'lliT - E.4.GLE
l-:VE, M.i\ 3. I'Cd, , , uhiL-h
. oiucvcij all !lic !iearlt'i.-l(
Mnccrii\ ill l^cd McKuen and
Kahlil tiihraii
il musl bi |)iosiinied fnini
he same lelUr ihal In eonibal
he e\ ils ol raeism ail \ou need
ID is pniehiini \uii ,ire a racist I
oila - ihe inslani free and e|iial soeietv is |)rodiiee(l ti'oni
he hal ol sell-knowledge,
lou proud Socrales woidd
lave been. Or lo lake il down
nothcr philosojihical notch lie arcane rite ot exorcism asy enough, but how? Is a
nusque. "Get thee behind
•lie. Satan.", siitficient or docs
racism require the full regalia
>l bell, book and candle?
If troubled people who are
deeply concerned about the
\ il dualism of our society arc
orccd to conclude that racism
s generic, innate and inherled - where can they turn?
Vlust they lick their bleeding
learts in seclusion - knowing
10 matter what they think hey really (as Dr. Irwin
suggests), at gut lc\el - hate
.ill black people? And that
;he only solution is some sort
of magical encounter session
CONFIDENTIAL SERVICE
Women's
MEDICAL
C£IN1TER
Manitrual Ragulation
Birth Control
Counsallng
L
(215) 265-1880
l'\ \\ Inch IVnai ( OIOM\ t'..S.,A.
IS li^anslormed lo Ihe \uinderi.nul of "Paid el V'irginie. '
^ \m can moulh platitudes
iiil the Se'^nion on the Mount
comes OUI of your e.irs, (last
mixed metaphor* but it won't
gel an\one a job, it won't get
anviine decent housing and it
won't break ilown years ot entrenched perverse bigotry.
What is not needed nov\
are more naive, simplistic
Ladies' Aid Society sentiments, but action, action and
more action.
.Sitting on your ass and
spouting ivory-tower idylls
does not a free society make.
Liz Bennett
Off-campus student
Activity fee
doesn't include
many benefits
To the editor:
My gripe has been long in
coming. I've been pushed and
prodded too far by the S.C.C.
and Mr. Nagy. 1 live a quiet
student life. I've placidly paid
my activity fee each semester
like a good little student, and
never said a word when the
regularly increased. Now,
now I'm upset! The other day
the S.C.C. secretary wouldn't
."^erox copies for me because
she didn't feci like it. After 1
stormed around in the office,
she said 1 could do it myself
cat the small cost of .10 per
copy), Isn't the Xerox machine funded by the S.C.C.
budget? Doesn't that secretary get paid by the S.C.C.
ludget?
Another incident happened just today. I wanted to cash
a $5.00 check which another
student had written out to me.
Due to the fact,it was written
'rom one student to another I
had to get Mr. Nagy to O.K.
the check. No notice being
paid to the fact that I had my
I.D. validated. So, I took the
check to Mr. Nagy and after
proving to him I was a student,
and proving to him I had a
validated I.D., he didn't veto
my check. I cashed my check.
Our last Face in the Crowd for the semester, is t'ne dorm on
ihis campus with the most personality. High Hall.
A wise High Hall resident once said, ihat they put all the
normal people in the other dorms and they put all the derelicts in
High Hall. An investigation of the Campus Law Enforcement
records and the Dean of Student Life's office could prove this
statement to be correct.
High Hall has seen the likes of such standouts as Chet
Glowacki. Bob Bcirrickman, Wayne "Mad Dog" Field, Steve
"Stud" Studholm, and last, but certainly not least, Terry
McGlinchey. who is known by all as Teen Angel.
.High Hall residents of tomorrow will never be the same as the
High Hall residents of yesterday and today. High Hall will be
losing most of the people who made it famous, next semester.
Everyone is either dropping out, transferring, or moving out of the
dorm.
Probably High Hall will never again see the likes ofthe Brown
Towel, the afternoon bathers on Pebble Beach, the mobile lounge,
otherwise known as the elevator, and the hockey, soccer, golf,
football, baseball, and host of other sports that were played in the
hallway.
A freshman next year will never find out about; the Killer,,
the Towering INferno, Jersey, wall ball. Bill Sheet and the upset
pool table, and most of all The Parties! Only good old Mrs. Foltz
will cherish these memories.
Whether they say it happily or sadly,Joe, Jack, Larry,
Froggy, Jersey, Herb, Gut. Bo. Wit, Chuck, Wes, Errol, Jit and all
the rest would like to say good-bye to High Hall.
but had to pay the small
amount of. 10. Mr. Nagy is an
employee of the S.C.C. and
the bookstore is under the
S.C.C. The S.C.C.is a student
corporation and being an
activity fee paying student, 1
own a share of that corporation; therefore, the preceding
incidents were uncalled for
cont. on page 4
Editor's note — In reference to
the article "Cross-country trip
planned for summer" two
additional points of information must be clarified: food
and laundry c-osts are incladed
in the 700 dollar fee to be
chaiged for the trip, and the
cost of the trip Is based on
eight students going bi two
S.C.C. vans.
"To the Editor" and the
writer's signature, DIanna
WIttle, were accldently ominitted from the letter to the editor
In the Wednesday May 5
edition of the Eagle Eye.
Tfiank you to
placement office
tutoring center
To the Editor:
As a senior who will soon
be moving on- I wish to
express some thoughts publicly before the close of classes
this semester. If you are a
student who is disillusioned
with Lock Haven, perhaps this
letter will change your mind a
bit. A THANK YOU to those
very kind people at the Placement Office who are always
willing to help - and to those at
the Tutoring Center who gave
me a wonderful experience as
well as being a pleasure to
work for. . . but inexpressible
Thank You's must go to those
professors who in my opinion
shine above the others because their talent and enthusiasm for their respective
areas is evident in every class:
Mrs. Bea Brown, Dr. Carney,
cont. on page 4
PRAECO PITCH
Avoid froumoffc regrefs:
Buy your Praeco now!
A DYING PUBLICATION? -- The Praeco, pictured above
with some of its cohorts, may be under threat of
extinction due to fiscal illness. Dollars are the cure to its
ailment; it makes good 'cents' to buy a yearbook. Get
yours today or tomorrow at lunchtime in the cafeteria.
Traditional yearbook
is sfucfenfs' favorife
"The day ofthe magazine
yearbook is gone," announced
Columbia Scholastic Press Advisors Association (CSPAA)
President Charles E. Savedge.
"It's popularity lasted only a
few years in the eariy 70's.
Students want a compact
package of the school year to
take with them when they go."
Savedge's comments
were made at a recent yearbook advisors' workshop in
New York City. He added that
the traditional style yearbook,
after which LHS' Pneco is
fashioned, has been and will
be the standard best-seller in
yearbooks for college students
around the country.
"College people want
their college careers told in
pictures. They'll keep student
newspapers if they want a
printed record of events,"
contended Savedge.
True to Savedge's comments, the 1977 Pnwco will
match its format with the
traditional one encouraged by
the CSPAA president. A magazine edition was planned for
the 1977 school year, but was
scrapped in a change of
editors.
Just think. Thirty years
from now, when you're married or dead or divorced, your
time spent here at Lock Haven
State will stretch out as the
most memorable portion of
your existence. 2006 will be
the year; Stanley Kubrick will
be the Patron of the Galaxy.
You'll be'nearing retirement
ftom a mundane life of riding
starships and popping proteinmeal pills. You'll have fights
with your computer foreman,
and there'll probably be a
huge layoff at the IHRP (the
Interstellar Humanoid Reproduction Plant) where you mix a
potent (heh-heh) combination
of testosterone extract and oil
of ova in a centrifuge from 9 to
5.
So there you'll be - a
destitute technological tenderloin. One day you'll lay back in
your imported Alpha Majorian
air-chair and kick yourself
(with your silicone ground
pads) for not buying a 1976
Praeco.
You'll think of all the good
times you had at LHS that you
never thought you'd ever
remember as being good.
You'll remember that crummy
roommate who took a bath
every other full moon, and the
time you saw a rat in the
ceiling tile at Fred's. Then
you'll think ofthe weird music
you listened to back then, but
you'll really miss those great
pre-pill meals that were actually cooked and consisted of
food and edible filler.
You'll remember the controversy over drugs, and how
it was much more fun then
because it was illegal. You'll
remember the classic cold and
the perrenial hangover and
you'll cry because you really
miss those days when you felt
so good because you didn't
have a cold or you weren't
hungover.
Buy a 1976 Praeco now,
and you won't suffer those
traumatic memories. You'll be
one of those lucky ones who
has a book made out of that
extinct resource paper. You'll
pay $6.00 now and have a
collector's item worth probably 40,000 quatlooves. You'll
have class. Just think.
Yearbooks will be on sale
daring the lunch hoar in
Bentley Hail today. Cktst of
the pablication is $6.00. Bay a
YearlMwk and a Book of Meal
Tickets and get yoar lanch
bee!
r
Today's Editorial
HELP!
It's embarrassing to ask for help. We ail like to think
we can get by on our own, and when we see we need
others, sometimes it's a blow to our pride.
Actually, the people who work on Publications are
only asking for students to help themselves. And that is
strangely ironic. The fact that Publications workers are in
danger of losing their jobs is secondary to the fact that the
college may lose an industrious department that tries to
serve a student need. Some people don't think a
Publications department is important enough to support,
and if there's enough of them, their opinions will be
realized.
This school can't affort to pour money into an effort
that doesn't come anywhere near to paying for its
expenses. Something has to give.
Right now we're trying to get the students to give.
Give $6.00. Six dollars can get you a decent meal or a
cheap shirt. It can also get you a 14 dollar and 81 cent book
that holds certainly more than $15.00 worth of
remembrances.
The SCC picks up the tab for senior yearbooks so
seniors receive theirs free. The SCC also pays $8.81 for
every other student who desires one. They do that because
they want to give the students a chance to buy something
they'll always have. That means the students can buy a
brand new yearbook for an outrageously low price of
$6.00. So far, 200 out of approximately 2100 undergraduates have bought yearbooks.
Student Publications was budgeted this past year to
buy 1200 yearbooks. As of this date, 700 of them sit in the
Publications Office.
We've tried to hustle them. That didn't work. Now
we're trying to get the students to buy them strictly out of
sympathy. And concern. If they had any idea of the time
and thought it takes to deliver such a product, they
couldn't help but appreciate the 1976Praeco.
What it boils down to is we're admitting a mistake.
We honestly thought that many more students would want
a good yearbook. Whether or not we receive some help in
paying for the ones we have now, there's a very good
chance we won't be having a yearbook next year. And If
we do, seniors will probably have to pay for theirs.
Right now it's a question of economics. Buying a
yearbook now, for any reason, will help the to sustain the
efforts of the Publications people. Journalism is supposed
to become a major here in a couple of years, and won't it
be just great if there's no Eagle Eye?
We've published this special issue of the paper in
order to saturate our readers with yearbook-mania.
Hopefully, students will realize the value in buying a
yearbook this year. It goes far beyond the last page.
Letter to the Editor
To the Editor:
Wow, man, sorry if this
isn't spelled right, but I'm just
really blown away. I'm just
writing to ask you if you'll start
printing the Eagle Eye on the
same kind of paper as the
Praeco.
See, I copped a lid the
other day but didn't have any
material for to consume my
herbs in. Seeing an Eagle Eye
lying under my philosophy
book, I was struck with an
ingenious idea: roll my stash
in yesterday's trash.
Well I took one half-toke
and, believe me, you'd rather
snort camphor crystals than
fool with home-grown hootch
in an Eagle Eye.
Being a determined head,
and not having been "skatin'
since 3:00 yesterday, I
searched for a lip-slip that
wouldn't contribute to the
disintegration of my lung
tissue.
Well, my roommate had
just bought a 1976 Praeco, and
you'd be amazed at how good
page 92 tasted. I did the lid
and then thumbed through the
yearbook and man those pictures were absolutely heavy,
man. I mean they just give you
a rust).
If you could please start
printing the Eagle Eye's on
Praeco paper I'd sure be
grateful. I'll turn my dealer
friends on to it and I'd bet a
gold bong screen they'll buy
you out! That's not a proposition, that's just an inebriated
guess.
Sincerely,
Buzz Dout
'Do I hear $6.50?"
S-E-X in the P-U-B
This is Evalyn. She's our general manager. Evalyn gets advertising for the newspaper,
fixes broken publications equipment, helps to keep our budget intact, answers the phone and
is generally a friend to everyone involved in Student Publications.
One other thing Evalyn does is try to sell yearbooks. So far she's not faring too well.
When she found that hardly anyone was coming in to buy yearbooks, Evalyn said, " I would
just love anybody who came in and bought a yearbook!" We thought about it, but then
decided she'd better not. There's probably something in the Student Publications
Constitution that prohibits that kind of behavior anyway.
We're pretty liberal here at Publications, and we figure people ought to be allowed to do
what they're moved to. So we came up with a deal for Evalyn and anyone who comes into the
Publications Office today with six bucks and the above picture. That person will get to kiss
Evalyn.
Before people start trying to lock us up for breaking the law, we have to make one thing
clear. If some "unacceptable" buyers come in with purely lecherous intentions, Evalyn
reserves the right to give us six bucks out of her pocket and tell the dude to kiss-off. After all
Evalyn ain't the one who's hard up — we are.
Evelyn's no dummy though. She knows that we pay her, and we get our revenue from
yearbook sales among other things. So she's not going to bite the hand that feeds her, she's
going to kiss the person that pays her six bucks for a yearbook.
We realize that this Is experimental salesmanship. But who knows? This could be the
biggest thing in Lock Haven since coed dormitories. We'll just have to wait and see. We
have gone the way of all flesh and yearbook salesmanship. Bring in this picture of Evalyn
and six bucks, and get to kiss our general manager and a yearbook to boot.
Photographs copyright © 1976 Praeco
Ttiere can be no doubt that ttiis past school year has been an extraordinary one.
It boiled over with bizarre news events, bomb scares, budget cuts, cultural activities both successful and controversial - and great sports. Get a pictorial record of this
memorable year with the purchase of a 1976 Praeco. On sale today and tomorrow
during the lunch hour in Bentley, and all day every day in the Publications Office,
ground floor PUB.
PRAECO
PRAECO
PRAECO
PRAECO
PRAECO
May 7
page 3
EAGLE EYE
LH. baseball squad
wins division crown
By STEVE HEVERLY
Staff Reporter
WHAT IS A GOLDEN WHISTLE? - A Golden Whistle is
an honor bestowed on Physical Education Seniors, by
Physical Education seniors, for outstanding achievement
in the field. This year's winners were Michelle Corkery
and Bob Wright.
Eaglettes score
The Lock Haven State
Ba.seball leam became the
college's first division cliamnion in four years by det'eatuiL;
Slippery Koek Stale ,1-0 in a
nine
inniny
play-ott
i.;anie Tuesday atternoon al
indiana Field.
Pitcher Bob Weber performed brilliantly and pitehed
nine innings under play-off
pressure allowing just four hits
and no runs.
The Bald Eagles will open
lip the Conference play-offs
against the Eastern division
champions. Mansfield State
College, this Friday at 1:.K) at
Woolrich Memorial Field.
Game two of three will be held
at noon on Saturday at Wool-
easy victory
over Bloomsburg
By AL VALLETTA
Men's Sports Editor
*^L
-^A-T ^
Ht/f "*
"i
The Lock Haven State
Women's Tennis team scored
a 7-2 victory over Bloomsburg
State College on Tuesday.
Deb Stopper defeated
Ann McMunn 6-0. 6-1, Cindy
Stopper defeated Deb Woring
6-2,6-1, Jan Yerkes downed
Sue Weber 6-4, 5-7, 7-5, Sheila
Blackburm was edged by Deb
Sabatali 7-6, 6-4. Kyle Cornelius got by Sue Purnell 6-7, 7-5,
6-4, and Cathy Rose was
defeated by Lori Stonebech
6-4, 6-4 in singles action.
All three doubles teams
scored wins as the Stoppers
downed McMunn and Woring
6-1, 6-2, Cheryl Prosser and
Paula Wolfe defeated Mary
McHaugh and Sabatali while
Cheryl Channing and Donna
Tyler defeated Purnell and
Stonebeck, 6-3, 4-6, 6-0.
The women's final match
is today as they travel to the
Penn State Altoona campus for
a
1:00
p.m.
match.
BOB WEBER
Nittany Lions romp
By AL VALLETTA
Men's Sports Editor
The Lock Haven State
Women's Lacrosse team lost
its final match of the season
Tuesday to Penn State University, 11-3.
The Eaglettes, who finished 3-4-1 on the season,
were led bv freshmen Sue
Woolston's goal and two
goals by Caroly Rheiner.
Senior goalie Cathy Sherman had 17 saves in her last
varsity performance.
rich. If necessary game three
uill begin one-half hour alter
g.inie l\M).
Coach
Charles
FIHM-IC
staled in an ecstatic iockcri-ooiii that Bob Weber hinietl.
'the game of his lit''
••Weber .-.iruck "^" Ihrec
and was extremely lough with
men on base.
Weber goi
stronger toward the end as thr
taste of viclorv crept closer."
said Hberle.
The game was a pitcher's duel
as Slipperv Rock pitted its ace
against Weber. The Rock s
()•"'•• firehaller Kerr\ '•Mr.
K.^' Keenan hurled a Inie
game allowing just one earned
run.
Ihe game was scoreless
until the si.xth when " I h e
Haven" scored two unearned
runs.
Mike Crone started the
Haven machine rolling as he
reached first base on an error
by the Slippery Rock shortstop. Ed Strum then singled
with two outs. Dave Rover
reached base on an error and a
run scored and Stum moved to
third.
While Weber continued to
put Slippery Rock "goose
eggs" up on the scoreboard.
Lock Haven got an insurance
run in the eighth on a walk to
Stum. Royer then singled,
followed by a RBI single by
Steve DeLisle.
Outstanding fielding was
turned in by speedster Joe
Tarconish and Dave Royer.
The victory was a big one
for the team but especially for
The junior varsity lost its senior regulars Mike Crone.
final match of the season as Mike Mersky, Dave Royer,
Penn State edged the Eag- and ,leff Kashner. As freshmen the\ sat through a 3-i 1
lettes, 7-6. on two late goals.
conference record and prePaula Ernst, Kim Pallasdicted that Lock Haven would
tone. Pat Rudy, Amy Ousler,
win a division crown before
Wendy Keller and Mary Flieg
they graduated.
each scored a goal for the
'Thebaseball team warHaven.
med up Wednesday for the
The Lock Haven State play-offs by traveling to East
Golf team finished in twelfth Stroudsburg for a double
place at the Pennsylvania header. The Bald Eagles split
State Conferecne Champion- the doubleheader winning the
ships at Shippensburg.
first game 5-0, then losing the
Led by freshman Jeff Ru- second 5-4.
pert's two day total of 162
In the first game, Sopho(80,82) the Eagles totaled an
cont. on page 4
855 stroke count.
senate
com. Irom page 1
however, that an adjustment
would have to be made on the
money
allocated
for
the
summer.
The SCC also discussed
sign guidelines proposed by
ihe administration. Included in
the guidelines are; signs and
posters can only be hung on
bulletin boards, large signs
iiist be approved, signs must
lit contain any derogatory
latcments. signs must contain dates.
It was announced that
\.R.A. will return as Lock
laven State's food service
ecause they underbid Macke.
"We'll have to hold them
letty much to the contract,"
onimentcd Mock.
Free Tickets are available
in the secretary's office in the
PUB for a baseball game to be
played between the Williamsport Tomahawks and the Pittsfield Brewers on May 15 at
Bauman's Field in Williamsport. The SCC purchased 300
tickets from the Lock Haven
Chamber of Commerce.
On July 16. 17 and 18 a
tate-wide Commonwealth
\ssoeiation of Students mcetiig will be held at LHS.
Other announcements inhided that freshman orientalion will be this Saturday and
\ earbooks will be on sale today
in Bentley from 11 a.m. to 1
p.m.
activity
conl. trom page 2
and absurd. My protest will
take Ihc form of this letter and
a pledge to not pay my future
activity fees until situations
and people are put in their
place.
Diana Powell
thank you
cont. Irom page 2
Mr. Fetter, Dr. Gary, Mr.
Lundy, Mr. Mullen, Dr. Podol,
and Mr. Van Horn.
This is a feeble attempt to
express what 1 f e e l . . . you will
never be forgotten - with much
grafitude - many sincere
thanks.
Mrs. Barbara Kitko
Fri., May 7, 1976
EAGLE EYE
page 4
ih.
cont. Irom page 3
more Wayne Sowers pitched a
super game allowing just two
hits and no runs.
The Eagles scored two in
the third and one run in each
of the fourth, fifth, and
seventh innings.
Fatigue resulting from
three road games caught up
with the team in the second as
East Stroudsburg got single
runs in the first five innings to
offset Lock Haven's power
explosion in the third.
In the third inning, Mike
Crone ripped a home run. Joe
Tarconish then singled and
scored on Ed Stum's triple.
Following Stum's triple, Steve
DeLisle ripped a tremendous
two-run homer.
CLASSIFIEDS
WANTED - - Part-time employees for Student Publications, Fall 1976. Typists, photographers, printers needed.
No experience necessary; we
will train.
Steady hours,
$1.87/hour wage.
Contact
Evalyn Fisher, Publications
Office, ground floor PUB, ext.
456.
Help Wanted - Early childhood
or elementary majors for day
care substitutes. 962-2379.
Denise DeGeorge, Pioneer
Day Care Center
TALENT SHOW - Tonight at
Price Auditorium, 8 P.M. Featuring LHSC Talent.
No
admission fee.
FOR SALE-1973 CL-350
Honda, 5,000 miles, extras.
Contact Steve Guthrie, ext 443
or 748-9950.
1
Everyone wtio worl(ecJ on "Tiy
Can't Take It With You", "Bus
Stop", "Ttie Brave Little Taylor",
"The Creation of ttie World and
ottier Business", "Ttie Nigtit
Thoreau Spent In Jail", "Cinderella of Loreland", "The Annerican
Dream", and/or "The Hunted" in
any capacity is invited to a College
Players Banquet and Party Saturday, May 8th. Stop by Sloan 106
or 107 for more information...then
spread the word.
i
graduate
cont. Irom page 1
pericnce after the Master of
Social Work degree; candidates in medicine must have
an M.D. at the time of application.
Selection is based on the
academic and/or professional
record of the applicant, the
validity and feasibility of the
proposed study plan, tbe applicants' language preparation
and personal qualifications.
Preference is given to candidates who have not had prior
opportunity for extended study
or residence abroad.
Information and application forms may be obtained
from C. Herbert Larson, Jr.,
Fulbright Program Adviser at
Career Development Center.
The adviser is located in Raub
Hall and has office hours Mon.
thru Fri. from 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.
The deadline date for receipt
of applications in the Adviser's
office is October
ROOMS FOR RENT-For summer. Contact Bob Tayne, ext.
437,
WANTED; someone to share a
house and expenses for summer mths only - call 748-2697.
Rooms for Rent in Summer.
Contact A. Chester Lomison —
748-9383.
FOR SALE; 1963 Plymuth
Valient in good running condition -$150. Call 748-2697.
FREE! — Tickets to the May
15th Minor League (AA) baseball, night game between the
Williamsport Tomahawks and
the Pittsfield Brewers may be
obtained in the PUB secretary's office. Supply is limited;
first come, first served. Service provided by the SCC.
cnddleA
HALLMARK CARD & G i n SHOP
EXCELLENT
SELECTION OF CARDS
AND MOTHER'S DAY
GIFTS
1
t
*
1-
urs: Mon., Thurs., Fri. 9 to 9
Wed. till noon
Tues., Sat. 9 to 5
1
^
USED BOOK BUY
Students, professors: Put your excess books into circulation! Sell them on May 17 and 18 in
the PUB upper lounge
STORE INVENTORY CLEARANCE SALE
Leisure reading books: hardcover and paperbacks - 10% off list price
STORE SALE
GYM BAGS: TWO SIZES
Medium, $4.50
Large, $5.50
Media of